While the Internet Archive is a massive repository of free media, finding the full-length 1980 film can be tricky due to copyright laws. However, users can access several high-quality related items:
In the official records—the ones stored in the National Transportation Safety Board’s cold case archives, the yellowed microfiche at the Library of Congress, the tear-stained newspaper clippings from the New York Post —Flight 19 was a tragedy. On June 12, 1980, a Pan Am Boeing 747-100, christened the Clipper Oceanus , departed JFK for Paris with 287 souls aboard. At 2:47 AM GMT, while cruising over the dark Atlantic, the pilot radioed a routine position report. Then, silence. No mayday. No distress beacon. No wreckage. The most thorough search in aviation history found nothing. Not a single seat cushion, not a smear of fuel on the waves. The Clipper Oceanus had simply vanished, swallowed by the sea or, as conspiracy theorists whispered, by something else entirely. airplane 1980 internet archive
But here, in Maya’s terminal, the plane was talking. While the Internet Archive is a massive repository